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Boost to Libya peace efforts as new gov’t proposed

By AFP - Feb 15,2016 - Last updated at Feb 15,2016

BENGHAZI, Libya  — International attempts to end the chaos in Libya took a step forward on Monday as a new national unity government was proposed to lawmakers.

A UN-backed council of rival Libyan factions announced the formation of the revised Cabinet late on Sunday, after a previous government was rejected last month in a blow to peace efforts.

Years of political turmoil since the 2011 overthrow of longtime dictator Muammar Qadhafi have left Libya divided between rival governments and beset by violence as militia forces battle for power.

The oil-rich North African nation has also become an increasingly important haven for the Daesh terror group just across the Mediterranean from Europe.

 

Members of Libya’s internationally recognised parliament, based in the eastern city of Tobruk, met and adjourned until Tuesday after it was reported earlier that a vote on the new government would take place later on Monday.

“The MPs want to know the programme of the government, and to discuss the CVs of the ministers,” MP Khalifa Al Daghari told AFP.

Approval of the Cabinet — headed by prime minister-designate Fayez Al Sarraj — would be a vital step in resolving Libya’s political disarray, capping off months of difficult diplomacy.

Daghari also said the MPs wanted Sarraj to attend the next session.

He said Sarraj “didn’t communicate with the parliament, and that’s why we are asking him to attend the next session. He can ask to postpone it, but we want to see him here in the parliament”.

UN Libya envoy Martin Kobler urged members of the House of Representatives (HoR) to stand behind the new administration.

“The journey to peace and unity of the Libyan people has finally started,” Kobler wrote on Twitter.

“It is crucial now that HoR endorses the government of national unity. It’s a unique peace opportunity that must not be missed.”

The so-called Presidency Council, tasked under the peace effort with forming the government, revised the line-up after parliament rejected a 32-member Cabinet as too large.

It had set a 10-day deadline for a smaller Cabinet which expired on Sunday.

“We hope that this will be the beginning of the end of the conflict in Libya,” council member Fathi Al Mejebri said on Sunday from Skhirat, Morocco, where the group has been meeting.

The revised government would be composed of 18 ministers with Mahdi Al Barghati in charge of the defence ministry — a post which had been a major stumbling block in talks.

Barghati is close to Libya’s internationally recognised administration but his nomination was opposed by powerful army chief General Khalifa Haftar.

 

Dissidents ‘in the minority’ 

 

Divisions remain — two of the council’s nine members refused to endorse the government — but lawmakers told AFP dissidents were in the minority.

Two-thirds of lawmakers need to first approve the overall political agreement and then a simple majority must pass the confidence vote in the government.

The internationally recognised government is based in Libya’s far east, having fled Tripoli after a militia alliance including Islamists overran the capital in August 2014.

The alliance has established its own administration and parliament called the General National Congress (GNC).

About a third of GNC members supported the unity deal when it was agreed in December, but its formal approval is not required for the government to start working.

The power-sharing deal has been given added urgency by fears that Daesh, under pressure in Syria and Iraq, is establishing a new stronghold in Libya.

The group has seized control of Qadhafi’s coastal hometown of Sirte and launched a wave of assaults on rival forces, including suicide attacks that have killed dozens in recent months.

It has also made a concerted push to seize key oil facilities in Libya, which sits on estimated reserves of 48 billion barrels, the largest in Africa.

Foreign diplomats have piled pressure on Libyan officials to finalise the unity government and expressed deep concern over Daesh’s growing influence.

 

In Rome earlier this month, top diplomats from the US-led coalition bombing Daesh in Syria and Iraq rejected calls for foreign military intervention in Libya, insisting instead on the need for political stability.

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